CHAPTER XIV.

Herod, having heard the fame of Christ, supposes him to be John

the Baptist, risen from the dead, 1, 2.

A circumstantial account of the beheading of John the Baptist,

3-12.

Five thousand men, besides women and children, fed with five

loaves and two fishes, 13-21.

The disciples take ship, and Jesus stays behind, and goes

privately into a mountain to pray, 22, 23.

A violent storm arises, by which the lives of the disciples are

endangered, 24.

In their extremity, Jesus appears to them, walking upon the

water, 25-27.

Peter, at the command of his Master, leaves the ship, and walks

on the water to meet Christ, 28-31.

They both enter the ship, and the storm ceases, 32, 33.

They come into the land of Gennesaret, and he heals many

diseased people, 34-36.

NOTES ON CHAP. XIV.

Verse Matthew 14:1. Herod the tetrarch] This was Herod Antipas, the son of Herod the Great. Matthew 2:1, Matthew 2:1, where an account is given of the Herod family. The word tetrarch properly signifies a person who rules over the fourth part of a country; but it is taken in a more general sense by the Jewish writers, meaning sometimes a governor simply, or a king; see Matthew 14:9. The estates of Herod the Great were not, at his death, divided into four tetrarchies, but only into three: one was given by the Emperor Augustus to Archelaus; the second to Herod Antipas, the person in the text; and the third to Philip: all three, sons of Herod the Great.

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